The Ramsey Show - Your Emergency Fund Is A Force Field Between You And Life
Episode Date: March 4, 2024💵 Sign-up for EveryDollar today - The simplest way to budget for your life! George Kamel & Jade Warshaw answer your questions and discuss: "I'm in debt from making repairs to a home I bought from ...a meth addict and don't know how to fix this mess" Pick a Side: We're in Baby Step 7 and I want a new car, but my husband says we can't afford it "We backed out of buying a house and the sellers want more earnest money than what was in the contract" "My identity was stolen and I don't know what to do" read more: What to Do if Your Identity Is Stolen - https://ter.li/fban9v When is it actually beneficial to sell your house to pay off debt? "We're $100,000 in debt with a baby on the way and don't know how to fix this situation" "I'm debt free but still feel like I'm broke and don't know what to do" Support Our Sponsors: Angel Studios Yrefy Zander Insurance NetSuite Next Steps 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 Weekdays from 2-5pm ET or click here! 🏦 Take Your 3-Minute Money Assessment - Get a personalized money plan! 🎟️ It's game on! Get your ticket for Total Money Makeover Weekend. Listen to more from Ramsey Network 🎙️ The Ramsey Show 🧠 The Dr. John Delony Show 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💡 The Rachel Cruze Show 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 💰 George Kamel 💼 The Ken Coleman Show 📈 EntreLeadership Learn more about your ad choices. https://www.megaphone.fm/adchoices Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy
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Девочка-пай Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions, it's The Ramsey Show,
where we help people build wealth, do work that they love, and create amazing relationships.
I'm George Campbell, joined by Jade Warshaw this hour.
The number to call is 888-825-5225.
Don't be scared.
You jump in, we'll talk about your life and your money.
That's all we want to do is help you take the right next step
and maybe talk you off a ledge if you're about to do something stupid.
That's always a fun call.
The preventative medicine versus the emergency surgery.
All right, let's kick it off with Maria in Denver, Colorado.
What's going on, Maria?
Hi, thanks for taking my call.
So I purchased a home from a meth addict, and I'm now $33,000 in debt
because I had to do remediations on the home after I closed.
And I'm just curious how I should best pay this off and salvage my credit. I did receive
a settlement from the owner after discovering this problem, but I still have probably 80K
in repairs to make to the home. And I'm just curious how I can pay it down and salvage my
credit. So how much total debt do you have outside of a mortgage?
The $33,000, I don't have any other debt outside of my mortgage.
How many cards is that across? Across three cards.
How much money are you bringing in every month?
I'm bringing in about $4,000, no, probably $5,500.
$5,500.
And then what portion of that is your mortgage payment?
$2,800.
Yipes.
All right.
We got troubles.
We got troubles.
So tell me a little bit more about this.
Did you call it a remediation?
Yeah. this did you call it a remediation yeah so um they had to rip out the kitchen all the doors all the lighting anything porous anything wood so i basically bought the home and then they
stripped it um i found out two days after closing that did none of this come up in the inspection
that's my question no yeah none of it came up in the inspection so how did this come up in the inspection? That's my question. No. Yeah, none of it came up in the inspection.
So how did it come up?
I received a police report that I had requested two days after closing.
I had received every other police report.
And they had some police activity at this property because I did my due diligence and I looked through it.
But I didn't receive the one report that had the previous owner
handing over the meth to the police at her home saying she had a problem until two days after
closing. I don't know what happened to that one report that held it up, but every other report
was about a dog or about... So she was cooking meth in the house? No, no, not cooking, just doing meth.
Even at that level, you still have to remediate.
Oh, my goodness.
And you said there's still $80,000 of repairs.
Is this related to that?
Or this is just other repairs that you were planning on doing?
Related.
They stripped the home after I purchased it. And so I couldn't really go back and take, I couldn't like undo
the loan. Essentially I sued her and I got, thankfully I got about 60 grand back, but still.
So what happened to that? Yeah. What happened to that 60K?
So I have that. And that's my, my question is how do I pay down?
Like do I pay it on one lump sum?
Because I'm just worried that if I pay off my debt in one lump sum,
it's going to crash my credit more.
I would not be conservative with your credit right now. Me neither.
You've got bigger problems and bigger fish to fry.
I would knock out all the credit card debt today.
The rest becomes your emergency fund,
and then we cash flow the rest of the repairs.
Okay.
And so just make the rest of the repairs as
on cash.
As you're able to.
But leave three to six months of expenses
in there for actual emergencies,
which is not known repairs.
Okay.
Because we want to avoid you going further into debt.
I don't know why you're concerned
about the credit at this point. You're not going to go take
out more debt, are you?
No, but it just...
And you've got...
Listen, you've got a home.
You're going to make a mortgage payment every single month.
You're going to be just fine.
The credit score will settle itself.
Yeah.
And you're not planning on taking out more credit.
So...
No.
Okay.
You're right.
You're right.
That's the only point of having a good credit score is so you can access more debt.
Yeah. That's the only point of having a good credit score is so you can access more debt.
Yeah, well, I do want to, I was planning to start like buying other homes and, you know.
No, no, no, no. We're done buying homes right now.
We need to focus on our problems today and we can become real estate moguls down the line when you have a paid for property and money in the bank to pay cash.
Well, here's the thing, Maria.
We're not, and hear us when we say we're not, not the point of we're not intentionally trying to tank your credit.
However, George and I both know that when when you set down the path of paying off debt,
you're also simultaneously saying not not only am I paying off this debt, but I'm not going to
borrow money in the future. Otherwise, what's the point of paying off debt just so you can get more
and paid off again? That doesn't really make sense. So there's kind
of this assumption that if you're paying off your debt, if you're working this hard to do that,
if you're taking this lump sum and you're being diligent in that way, you kind of have to think
about the future and go, okay, well, if I've done all this work, then in the future, I'm going to
pay cash the same way you're going to pay cash for these other remediations that have to take place
in the same way, you know, in the future, if you do choose to buy real estate, you'll save up and pay cash for it.
Even though that sounds like a mountain load of cash, it's just good to kind of draw that line in the sand.
Okay, well, great.
Then that makes my solution easy.
Just pay it down and work with the remaining cash.
Well, I'm equally as worried, Maria, about this mortgage. It's 51% of your take-home pay it down and yeah work with their money cash well i'm equally as worried maria
about this mortgage is 51 of your take-home pay yeah well i have two roommates okay so i'm not
paying it all myself no but go ahead george well i'm just there's there's a lot going on here now
with the roommate situation yeah are they shipping in yeah i want to know can we have some clarity so
you own the house are they chipping in at all for any other repairs tell us you're the landlord so it's on you oh i guess
that's true but are you increasing the rent to help cover some of this or what's the deal there
no rent is staying the same with them um they are helping with repairs like by you know helping come
in and actually do the repairs.
So their time, they're paying you with their time.
Right.
And that's fine.
So that's been helpful.
And then also my mortgage lender offered two years free refinancing.
So hopefully if all goes well, not predicting the future, but if all goes well, I'll be able to refinance.
So if the rates drop, they're saying we were not going to charge you to refinance.
Exactly.
Interesting.
The only thing that makes me worried about this situation is when people own homes,
but they can't afford the rent on their own.
So they have roommates.
I always like a situation where you can float the rent on your own and you can do the mortgage
on your own and you can do the mortgage on your own. You don't need the
roommates for it to, you know, in order for it to not be dangerous for you. And I don't like the
fact that this would be dangerous for you if something happened with the roommates. That's
my only red flag on this. Well, I can definitely float the rent myself. So what I told you,
the mortgage, I guess I should clarify that also includes utilities, insurance, all of the things bundled.
I have no car debt. I have no other debt.
My monthly expenses include cell phone, my cell phone, and that's more or less that outside of food.
So I can definitely flow the rent on my own.
Well, I'd focus on just knocking out this credit card debt today. Cut up the cards. Don't look back. Use the rest of the emergency fund
and cash flow the rest of these repairs. Do not go into debt ever again. I'm sorry you're going
through this. It's goodness gracious. These inspectors. That's crazy. Should I just go
become an inspector? Looks good, guys. I don't understand how that was missed. Wow. All right.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Welcome back to The Ramsey Show.
I'm George Campbell, joined by Jade Warshaw. The number to call is 888-825-5225.
Well, it's time for our long-running segment, Jade.
And by long-running, you mean this is the third time?
Third time.
Okay.
It's long for me you know
so it's called pick a side and this is where we have two people on the line and we have to help
them kind of settle a debate and you and i at the end of it have to pick a side after we hear them
out and hear their case i enjoy this thoroughly i'd pitch judge george for the name of this segment
they didn't like that judge george and i wanted a little gavel. Just a little baby gavel. Then I'm going to
pitch Judge Jade. Oh, dang.
That's so much cooler.
Alright. I give up. Here we go.
Let's see what Jennifer
and Joe have to say in Denver, Colorado.
What's going on, guys?
Hi. Yeah, I'm ready to
buy a new car, and my husband
thinks I'm fine with the one that I have.
Wow. Alright. joe what do you
have to say for yourself well i do agree that she needs a new car um she just wants to spend way
too much on a new car what does she want to spend 50 000 okay that's a lot of money and that's the
most you guys have ever spent on anything outside of a house, I'm guessing?
Yes.
Okay.
Where are you guys at financially?
We're on baby step seven.
Paid for house, no debt, love it.
And what's your net worth?
It would be what our house is worth.
Yeah, $600,000.
Plus retirement?
$700,000. So not? $500,000, $700,000.
So not quite a million?
No.
Okay.
All right.
And what's the household income?
$150,000 approximately. Last year we did $150,000.
Okay.
And how much cash do you guys have in the bank?
We have our emergency fund right now of $10,000.
And I got $10,000 in my business account.
So 10,000 and 10,000, if you were to buy this car,
A, were you thinking of getting something brand spanking new?
And two, how are you going to pay for it?
I would want to save up for it.
Okay.
And I don't necessarily want something new.
It's just what I want just came
out. So I want to wait a couple of years until I can buy one a couple of years old. What kind
of car is it? Can you tell us? It's the Toyota Grand Highlander. Highlander. Where's John Deloney
when we need him? That's what he ended up getting. I need like a picture of a Highlander. I don't
really know what that is. I'm going to Google it. They're beautiful. Really great cars. Okay. So
what is the car you're currently driving? I have a 2007 Acura MDX and it's getting close to 200,000
miles on it. Oh, she's just getting started. That's a nice, that's a nice little ride though.
The MDX is invincible. Okay. Love that. And what is he driving? I'm curious.
I have a 2004 GMC pickup truck, and then we also have a 2020 Transit Connect van.
I'm self-employed, and so I use that van for work.
Cool.
Okay.
Might be time for both of you to upgrade.
I know, right? Baby step seven, living like no one else.
I know, that's right.
I'm guessing you guys have a sizable margin in your budget now to save up. How much could you throw every single month just
to kind of a side savings account? Oh, I think we could have it saved in six months. Wow. Yes.
Yeah. That's pretty impressive. It's pretty simple. So yeah, I mean, we could save five,
six thousand a month. That's great. For expenses. Okay. So tell us, Joe, why, tell us what you would do if it were your choice.
Obviously, we know Jennifer wants this $50,000 Toyota Highlander, slightly used.
In your book, what's something a little bit more reasonable?
$30,000, $35,000.
Maybe not the grand Highlander, but the regular Highlander.
That's what I'm looking at.
This one I'm looking at is like 30,000 2023 Highlander LE.
Is that not the one?
No, I want the Grand Highlander.
You want the big boy.
They just came out in 2024.
Okay.
Got you.
Joe, I'm curious.
Where'd you get that 35 number from?
Just your heart?
Oh, yeah, just my heart.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, I look on Craigslist, and you can find the regular Highlanders.
Yeah, I see one.
With 30, 30,000 miles for 30,000 or so.
Yeah, I see what's going on here.
Okay, interesting.
All right, we have a lot of information here.
I feel like, you know, we've been doing Dave Ramsey's Baby Steps for a long time.
I feel like I've been living like nobody else.
When do I, we're on Baby Steps 7, when do I get to live like nobody else?
Listen, I feel that.
So tell me, when was the last time you did an activity that you would call a live like no one else, the latter?
Like at least a couple of grand, where you're like, we dropped some money on this.
We went to the Dominican.
Yeah.
Okay.
When was that?
Last month.
Nice.
Okay.
So you guys are enjoying life.
Yes.
So we would say
you've driven like no one else.
Now it's time to drive
like no one else.
You've driven the Hoopty Dave car.
Now it's time to drive the Dave car. You know what I the hoopty dave car now it's time to drive the
dave car you know what i'm saying i've made up my mind i i know what i'm i know how i'm gonna vote
it i got gotten a car accident a couple months ago so it's dinged up on the side man listen
you keep playing tell us more she's like really playing it up all these stupid little things
don't work on it anymore. You cannot reset my clock.
You can't tell what time it is in there.
Jennifer, I call those special features.
My seatbelt
doesn't go back. Listen, I got my phone
in the car. I got my Apple Watch in the car.
I know what time it is. It's fine.
That's not a big deal. But I'm with
you. Okay, can I vote?
I know what my vote is. Are we casting votes?
I think we're casting
votes you guys ready to hear the the verdict yeah let's say it on three all right are the name of
the person that we think is right uh yeah say the name of the person you think is right on three
one two three jennifer yeah oh my jennifer you just won a brand new Toyota Highlander.
That'd be fantastic.
And a dinette set from Broy Hill.
What do you think?
Are you shocked?
No.
I'm shocked.
Of course Joe is shocked.
Here's the thing, because I know this.
We bought my wife a new-to-us car.
It was a slightly used luxury car, and it hurt my soul, Joe, to write that check.
But I also knew this is part of living
the plan part of the plan and i have a hard time letting go and writing a big check like that
but when you pay for it in cash you go oh my gosh that was a lot and then you go this is paid for
this is amazing this is a huge blessing and it's why we lived like this for so many years and so
i think you guys are doing the right thing just so you know the parameters here you don't want all things with motors and wheels
to be more than half of your annual income so that's where I'm going all right 150k is your
income everything you own should be 75k listen Joe you could turn around and get yourself a
$50,000 car and be all right now what is this transit connect worth? About $20,000, I guess.
Yeah.
So even the $20,000 plus the $50,000 for hers, that would be $70,000.
You still got some wiggle room there.
Okay.
Not too much.
Not too much.
And maybe you wait three years and you get the Highlander,
but I think you go for it in two years from now
and you get a two-year-old Grand Highlander.
And if you can't wait that long, then just go for a normal Highlander
and you can always upgrade later.
Nothing says you have to drive this car
for the next 20 years,
which is kind of how you guys have been living.
Right.
I feel like Joe's really disappointed
unless he was waiting.
No, you shouldn't spend more than 30.
But I think that will help you guys to go,
okay, half of our income
shouldn't be tied up in these things.
That means we do need to scale back because this transit, plus the Joe is going to get plus the car Jennifer is going to get,
it's going to add up to be a large part of our world.
And then once you hit millionaire status, you can go buy that brand new car.
And here's why.
It's not a fundamentalist thing.
It's just that too much of your world would be tied up in a depreciating asset.
But when you have a million-dollar net worth,
you can stomach that hit on depreciation a little easier.
And so you guys will be there in no time.
How old are you two?
I'm 45.
And I'm 56.
Oh, my goodness. You got so much time to live and drive like no one else.
And you know what, Joe?
I think it should be time for you to upgrade after.
What is your dream car, Joe?
It's a $30,000 car.
We know that.
It's the one he's got.
I actually love my truck.
He wants another GMC pickup.
No, he wants to keep the one he has.
I like the one I got.
That's amazing.
It's got an eight foot bed.
It's got the diesel and I'm good.
Thank you, Joe.
They don't make those eight foot beds anymore.
All these new pavement princesses out here got the tiniest little beds.
I'm like, what are we even buying pickup trucks for anymore?
So then, Joe, real quick, tell us.
If you could spend $30,000 on anything, not a vehicle, what is your thing?
Like, what's your live like no one else thing?
I would do a boat.
Hey, okay.
There we go.
Now we got it.
Joe's in the boat.
Thank you guys so much for the call and for letting us have some fun
excited for you guys to make that cash purchase of that beautiful new to you car very very soon
more of your calls coming up 888-825-5225 this is the ramsey show
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Welcome back to The Ramsey Show. I'm George camel joined by jade warshaw this hour the number
to call is triple a 825-5225 springfield illinois is where we're heading next levi joins us there
welcome to the ramsey show levi are you with us levi we were so close to getting levi on the air
well we'll try to get you back, Levi. I don't
know what happened, but if we can't, I'm sorry, and call back later, my friend. We're going to
go to Taylor up next in Eau Claire, Wisconsin. Taylor, welcome to the show. Thank you. Oh my
gosh. Okay. So my husband and I put in an offer on a house, which was accepted right away.
We had seven days to turn in the earnest money. And on day five, we decided to not
do it. So we told our realtor right away and we never paid the earnest money.
Long story short, we got married last August. We're now pregnant with a baby in July. And we
found out last month that my husband who's in the military is deploying this fall for about a year. So the reason that we
jumped on this house is because we got scared, tried to make a decision. It would be easier
for me to live by myself for a year. And then after signing it, we were like, this is not a
good idea. This is not the house we want. So we canceled. We never paid the earnest money. And
now the seller's mad and they want not only the $3,000 of the earnest money, but they're
asking for $5,000 and they're threatening to seek legal counsel, I guess, if we don't pay.
And we just don't know what to do. So you signed the offer saying that you would,
and the offer said that you would pay their earnest money within seven days.
Yes.
What does the contract say about getting out of this?
Because generally there's a few ways you could legally back out of this
and get your earnest money back or not have to pay.
Home inspection contingency, appraisal contingency, financing contingency.
Is any of that in the contract?
It is, but none of that applies to the situation.
And, I mean, it was just us backing out of it.
Our realtor isn't being very helpful, which we feel like is because, obviously, she's not.
I think you are on the hook for it, though, Taylor.
If you make an offer, because literally my husband and I were just in this situation a couple weeks back if you make an offer and then they and you work with the agent
say here's what we're offering da da da da they send you the paperwork you sign it you're saying
when you sign it you're saying I'm going to pay the earnest money within this many days this is
what's going to happen next and this was what's going to happen next you're kind of you signing on the dotted line is committing to the offer in many ways in all the ways so
there's part of me that thinks that you're on the hook for this and you just the fact that you didn't
pay the earnest money doesn't mean that it wasn't due it just meant that you didn't say what you
said you were going to do if the contract said that you would provide the money within seven to ten or five to ten business days or whatever it was five to seven days so they
what would you do about the five thousand dollars though because it was originally three and now
they want more money yeah where why are they wanting more yeah because they are mad about
lost time and they refuse to sign the contract the new one where we said we're canceling and not paying.
And so they're losing time because they won't sign anything.
That's up in the air. I feel like that's debatable. I mean, they could probably fight it in court and fight for that lost time and put a dollar
value on that. I would see if you can just settle with them for the three and go, listen,
here's all we can do. I got a baby on the way. My husband's about to be deployed.
We're in a crazy situation. I hate that this happened. Didn't want it to go down like this. Here's your three.
I don't know if there's a legal way you can get out of this without you fighting it. And I don't
think you guys have the money or time to go to court and fight this. No. That's the thing. Listen,
I hate that this happened, Taylor, but I tell people all the time, like, that earnest money, if you buy the house, it goes towards the down payment. But if you don't,
that's money upfront that you're spending that obviously you have the propensity to lose.
And that...
I call it skin in the game money.
Yeah.
This shows I'm really serious about, you know, buying this house. And so the other thing you
could do, which has its own risks of going through with the home inspection and the appraisal and financing, and then having one of
those things cause an issue to where you back out. But it sounds like these people are angry enough
that they're not going to be happy if you back out later on and waste even more of their time.
Yeah. Okay. It's tough.
So that's a road you could go down but i'm telling you you could still end
up paying and it still could be messy if it were me i'd take the contract and i would ask around
and i'd ask a couple of different real estate agents i'd say like am i on the hook for this
am i on the hook for this and see if you can get some free counsel from other agents if you say
that yours is not helping out much which never never use them again, by the way.
And maybe contact a real estate attorney and just do a free consult and say, here's my situation.
Do you think I have a case here to even fight this or what should I do?
Yeah, we're just concerned.
We don't want this to go on any longer because obviously they're mad about last time and
we tried to cancel as soon as possible, but it went on way longer because they're fighting it.
We're a little confused why they wouldn't just want to put their house back on the market,
but they can't do that until this is done.
So they're losing time on their own.
So this is causing them to hang in the balance here until they get the situation sorted with you guys.
Yeah.
I mean, you have the $3,000.
How much do you guys have in cash? About $15,000. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, you've guys, you have the 3000. How much do you guys have in cash?
About 15. Okay. Yeah. I'm going to label this under kind of a stupid tax and we learn from
the mistake and we move on and go, that hurt. Let's not make decisions out of desperation again,
because this is the kind of stuff that will happen. Okay. So are you guys going to rent
for the foreseeable future while your husband's deployed? We own a house and we talked about renting or buying and I hated all the rentals
and it just didn't feel like home. And so we looked at a house that was closer because we
live pretty far out. And I mean, the interest rate is double what ours is at. And we just felt like
it would be a big waste of money for us so and why can't you stay where
you're at right now i can it's just it's we're about 25 minutes out from town so there's not a
lot here for me and i feel kind of alone you don't have any family nearby i'm not no and the daycares
are far like like groceries you know everything is away. So I just wanted like convenience for myself because it's going to be hard enough. But yeah, we're not really willing to pay for it anymore.
Yeah. Well, if you did move closer to town, you might need to, you know, compromise and settle
and go, all right, this rental is good enough for this season that I'm in so that I can be closer
to civilization as I raise this baby while my husband is deployed.
I mean, that's a lot.
Yeah.
So I feel for you.
But, you know, adding to the chaos of becoming a homeowner, I don't know that it's worth it right now.
Yeah.
Especially when you guys have 15 grand to your name.
I have to take care of it by myself.
I just wanted something closer to town so that at least it was easier for me for running errands.
Yeah. Now that's reasonable. And I hope you guys get this real estate situation sorted out. But,
you know, I would have other, some other people look at the contract, get some other opinions, but I think at the end of the day, you just settle with them and go, we can do three,
we can't do the full five. And if they want to waste their time coming at you for that,
I don't know that they have a case first of all, but.
They might have a case, but the question, question like you said is it worth the brain count calories and
time calories to go after someone in you know judge george court it's for sure you'll be lucky
to even make it to a judge george court you know but it'd be some small claim situation right there
but i'm so sorry this is happening to you yeah it was a dumb mistake we made but we kind of
panicked so well we always say on this show never no one makes good decisions when they're panicked
or drunk that's right but you can always go back and try to settle it and see if if they'll take
something but yeah i mean i would personally have some pity on a you know a soon-to-be mom
husband's getting deployed serving our country i'm gonna
go like i don't know george because when you're on the other side of it and you've got timelines
like you know she was super sweet but i'm thinking about when sam and i were moving here you have a
timeline it's all business and i'm like don't mess around and make an offer because time is money
when it comes to this stuff and i i was trying to understand what she was saying, but I think that,
I think the seller,
I think they have to have this deal closed and wrapped tight before they can legally accept another offer.
Is that what was going on there?
Is that why they were saying that they were losing time?
I think right now it's contingent
and they can't make it live and active again
until this situation is sorted
because this offer is still halfway out there.
I see.
I think that's the issue. Just remember when buying a house, I always say,
George, you need that stacked deck and down payment. We know five to 20% earnest money that can be up to one to 3% of the purchase price. It's a lot of money. Also keep in mind closing
costs. If you're going to be the buyer, two to 5 5%. And then the K, keep in mind, appraisals, inspections, moving costs, like you said.
Homeownership is no joke.
So for those of you excited about it, make sure you got your ducks in a row before you jump into this.
This is The Ramsey Show.
I've been doing this show for over 30 years and some of the saddest calls I've taken are from
situations that are completely preventable. Yeah. And what's so hard is I feel like one of those,
especially the ones that I'm like, oh, it's terrible. People that call in and their spouse
has passed away suddenly and they don't have life insurance. When you have to think through,
how am I going to pay my bills in the middle of all that grief,
it's terrible. So life insurance is the one thing, especially as a mom with three little kids that
I'm so big on for people to get because it's inexpensive. Zander is the place that Winston
and I actually get all of our life insurance. And it doesn't cost much because Zander shops
among a gazillion different companies. It doesn't cost much. You just have to admit that someday
you're not going to be here. You got to say it out loud and you got to say, I'm going to say I love you to my family by taking
care of them and taking the time to put this stuff in place. The cost of stinking pizza.
To get a free quote, call 800-356-4282. That's 800-356-4282 or go to zander.com.
This is the Ramsey Show. I'm George Campbell, joined by Jade Warshaw.
We've got a fun event coming up this May 10th and 11th. It's called Total Money Makeover Weekend,
a brand new event where in one weekend, you'll get a crash course on everything we teach about
money. And no matter where you're at in your financial journey, the baby steps,
this will light a fire under you like nothing else. It's going to be interactive, lots of Q&As. We are coming up with some really fun, different talks, Jade, than we've
ever done before. Trying to spice it up. Is that what I heard you working on this morning? Yes.
Okay. For those of you listening- Did you hear an Arnold Schwarzenegger impression? I heard some
crazy, hilarious things, George. We're just workshopping. We're trying out some stuff.
These people are in for a treat. I
like it. It's going to be a blast. Every single Ramsey personality will be on the stage. It's a
two-day event, Friday and Saturday, May 10th and 11th. We've got Smart Money Happy Hour on Friday
night live. We love a live audience for that with Rachel and I. So don't wait to get your tickets
to Platinum. Plus, tickets are almost sold out. A handful left. Early bird pricing ends on Thursday of this week. So if you're planning on joining us, get your tickets now to save up
to a hundred bucks. Just go to ramseysolutions.com slash events and start plugging this into your
every dollar budget. Plan for that transportation. It's a destination event here in Nashville.
You'll have a great time. Plan for that Platinum Plus. That's gangster. I know. I like that. We
keep coming up with new tiers just to spice things up.
RamseySolutions.com slash Vince is the place to go.
All right.
Let's go back to Levi in Springfield.
Let's see if we can get him on the air.
Levi, are you with us?
I am.
Thanks for taking the call.
You left me on red, bro.
I got nervous.
How can we help?
How are you guys?
Doing good.
How are you?
Not too bad. I have a little bit of an issue though okay um so my wife and i we've been working through baby step number two and we've been making
good progress and i just recently discovered that my identity had been stolen oh yikes and
i guess i'm just looking for some guidance on how to navigate that.
How bad is it?
I'm not really sure.
Hopefully not too bad yet.
I checked my credit report, and there was nothing on there that shouldn't be.
I've been keeping an eye on my bank accounts and everything seems okay there um what happened
was they opened up a credit card in my name and then just a couple days ago i got three phone
bills sent to me for numbers that i do not own so man that stinks and i've been in your exact
shoes levi this is back in 2013.
I had identity theft.
They opened up two cell phone accounts, AT&T, Verizon,
racked up $1,700 on both, never paid a dime,
using my social security number and an old address.
Oh, shoot.
Is it similar to you?
Yeah, my social security number, but they're using my current address.
That's why I'm getting all the notices.
Man. So have you frozen your credit yet?
I just did that today.
Okay.
That's good.
That's good.
And did you have a fraud alert placed on all of your credit accounts?
No, because I haven't been able to speak with AT&T yet.
It's impossible to speak with a human being with them, I guess.
Anyway, I filed a police report yesterday.
Okay, good.
And I want to keep trying to contact AT&T and get through to them.
But the credit card did put a fraud alert.
The credit card company put a fraud alert on my credit report.
Okay, and they reversed the charges.
You want anything on any of that?
Nope, there were no charges on the card.
I caught it in time.
Okay, that's good.
Have you filed a report with the Federal Trade Commission yet on their website, FTC?
No, I have not. Okay, I would do that's good. Have you filed a report with the Federal Trade Commission yet on their website, FTC? No, I have not.
Okay.
I would do that as well.
And you already have the police report, so you're going to need that as you submit it to different creditors and credit bureaus.
You might need that.
Okay.
And outside of that, make sure you're checking all of your accounts regularly.
Make sure you have a freeze on all three accounts with all three bureaus.
Okay.
And then beyond that, you want to get any account records from all these.
If there's a debt collector involved or AT&T, get every record you can get.
That's the thing.
What if AT&T doesn't cooperate with me on this?
What steps do I need to take?
Well, I mean, if you have a police report and you have the FTC report report that should be enough to get them to go oh this wasn't him i mean i don't know how they
give you issue or cause you to don't ever pay a dime for any of these accounts gotcha even if it
goes to collections yeah this is not your yeah i wasn't planning on paying anything but and then
did you can already connect your talk to your bank no i haven't spoke to my bank yet okay that'd be
my next move when i get off the phone with us.
Let them know that this has happened because who knows what else they have,
but I would probably get a new account set up with a new card attached.
Yeah.
Okay.
And also contact your utility providers and let them know.
Do I need to contact the Office of Social Security?
If you suspect that they have either your social security card,
if you suspect that they have your driver's license,
I'd contact social security, I'd contact the DMV,
and maybe even if you think they might have your passport.
Only you can suspect what you think is going on here
and how you think they got your information.
Yeah, I would contact them on their website
and see if you can get a replacement.
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
Yeah, I know they don't have my physical cards,
but I don't think you can open up a phone line
without a Social Security number,
so that's just why I assumed they had it.
Yeah.
They have an Office of the Inspector General,
and we'll send you the blog post that outlines all the steps you need to take.
I would also update your main passwords and usernames.
Okay.
And for the future, ID theft protection is super important to have.
We have it on every single team member here at Ramsey, and ours is through our friends at Zander.
So it's like an insurance.
It's not technically an insurance product, but that will help with all the restoration services
that you need to get your life back.
And it's super cheap.
Like before I came here,
I think I paid like 12 bucks a month for it.
Yeah, now I think it's like seven bucks a month.
Yeah, for me and my husband.
Levi, we'll make sure to send you that,
the article that outlines all these steps.
But man, the truth is,
it's just gonna take some time and effort
to get all this sorted out,
but you're gonna be okay.
Yeah.
I think that that...
Don't lose sleep over it.
Having that ID theft protection is going to be really important going forward
because a lot of times once your ID is stolen once,
it's kind of like that information is out there
and it's likely that it can happen again.
So having somebody who's monitoring it all the time is a big, big deal.
Yeah.
And we'll hook you up with our friends at Zander as well and see
what they can do about it after the fact to help you clean this up, man. So sorry you're going
through this. Hey, one other thing, be sure to monitor your tax return too. Make sure that
they're not trying to get their paws at that because that is a pain in the you-know-what to
go through. Yeah. Thanks for the call, Levi. I appreciate it, man.
And for everyone listening out there,
if you want to check out that blog article that I wrote,
it's called What to Do If Your Identity is Stolen.
It's on the Ramsey Solutions website,
and we will put a link in the description and show notes
wherever you're listening,
so you can just scroll down there and click,
and we'll make sure that Levi gets that as well.
But be sure to check out Zander's ID theft protection.
It really is a great way to make sure you're covered, your family's covered.
Again, it's like I'm seeing here on their website, individual, $6.75 a month, $75 a year.
For a whole family, it's $145 a year, $12.90 a month.
And it has saved my bacon one or two times when that does happen.
It's one of those things like home insurance.
You hope you don't have to use it,
but goodness, when it's there,
and this lady at Zander's handling everything for me,
and I just submit all the paperwork,
it just gave me a little bit of peace and confidence
as I went along my business.
I've never had my identity stolen.
I've had a debit card.
You know, like somebody gets your debit card number
and tries to buy Xboxes,
which is what happened to Sam and I one Christmas Eve eve but other than that like never the extreme of like they've
got my social and they've got my well if it's almost like a like a home invasion just such a
invasion of your own privacy yeah i mean they're stealing from you at the at the most personal
level yeah and the truth is this happens so often that like rarely are you going to get that i
wanted my these people to like go to jail and they're like, it doesn't work like that.
You want to see him taken away in handcuffs. I went full detective. I was like, I'm going to
find out who these people are. My wife was like, please don't, don't do that. You don't know what
you're doing. You're not John Wick. All right. You're not, this is not going to be some Liam
Neeson level, you know, revenge story. I'm learning that about you, George,
that you really do like to get to the bottom of things. I'm thinking about another story you told me. I'm a nice guy until
I'm not a nice guy. But truly, it is so, so funny. It is not a fun thing to deal with. And so you
want to make sure, you know, with one of these ID theft protection services, what they're offering
is number one, real time identity monitoring, instant alerts, the recovery work for every type
of identity theft, and what's
really cool, recovery of up to a million dollars in stolen funds. Wow. That's partially what's
covered with identity theft protection. So be sure to check it out at ramsaysolutions.com. You can
find our identity theft protection help from our friends at Zander. That puts this hour of
The Ramsey Show in the books. Thank you to my co-host, Jade Warshaw, all the folks in the booth. We got Skyler, Ben, Austin, Zach, Nathan, Bobby,
all hanging out back there, keeping the show afloat.
And you, America, thank you so much for listening.
We appreciate it.
We'll be back before you know it.
Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions,
it's The Ramsey Show,
where we help people build wealth,
do work that they love, and create amazing relationships. I'm George Campbell, joined's The Ramsey Show, where we help people build wealth, do work that they
love, and create amazing relationships. I'm George Campbell, joined by Jade Warshaw. It's your show,
America, so call us up at 888-825-5225. We'll talk about your life and your money, and we'll tell
you the truth, even if it hurts your feelings a little bit, because we care that deeply.
Brandon kicks us off in Fort Wayne, Indiana.
Brandon, welcome to the show. Hey, George, a big fan of yours.
Thank you. I appreciate you guys having me on the show.
Absolutely. I came across your book,
and it's changed the way my wife and I view money. That's so cool to hear.
That's the basis of our question. Ultimately, our question is whether or not we should go down to one car to pay off our debt.
Wow.
We have three cars.
One of them is a sports car, just a fun toy that's automatically sold.
But my wife and I are trying to decide, should we go down to one car
to be out of debt as soon as the car sells?
Or would that not be smart to do that? Do you have kids? Yeah,
we have a one-year-old. Okay. And I'm a full-time student. Okay. And my wife works full-time.
Okay. So, and I'm guessing proximity, my mind goes to proximity because when my husband and
I were getting out of debt, we went down to a one-car family, and we did it because my sister went down to a one-car family, and they did it with two kids.
So we figured, okay, we can do this.
But I do think proximity matters, like her being able to drop you off at school, on her way to work, those sorts of things.
Do you see a world where that could take place?
Yeah.
It'd definitely be kind of hard, but she makes her own schedule.
And my parents have three cars
and there's a chance
that we might be able to borrow
one of their cars for a month.
Ooh.
What would happen in that month?
So we've literally just started
the process.
So all we have is her student loans.
But we have about $10,000 set aside that we haven't put towards it yet.
So you have $10,000 cash.
How much in total debt?
$28,000 in student loans.
And between the two cars, based off a Kelly Blue book, we could get $25,000.
$2,500?
$1,000.
$25,000.
For the sports car plus the other car000. $25,000. Wow.
For the sports car plus the other car that you're planning on selling.
Great.
Correct.
So between that plus your cash, you have $35,000.
You knock out the student loans.
You have $7,000 left over.
Right.
We go purchase a $5,000 car.
Yeah.
I love this plan.
I think it's solid.
Okay.
Yeah, it's just a little nerve-wracking, you know, having a kid going down to one car.
But even if, like my question was, even if, like, we couldn't, there's a chance we could borrow the car from my parents.
But even if not, you think it's still smart?
I think it's really...
For you to drive the $5,000 car for a while?
Sorry, you're breaking up on us, Brandon.
I'm sorry. Just to go down to one car until we can. I mean, you could survive that for a few weeks, depending on how strong your marriage is.
I think I could probably make it one week before it starts to tear us apart. I think that. And my
wife works here, by the way. Let me tell you, I'm just being honest. I think that people don't
consider it. And I think that they would be shocked my husband and I were a one-car family for 10 years we started years yes we sold our car um in 20
2009 Sam when we were getting out of debt and we stuck to one car and then we had two kids and we
still had one car and when we moved here when I joined ramsey i we bought our second car wow yeah so it
can be done it just requires coordination and it's one of those things that when you first start out
it's uncomfortable because you're not used to it but once you figure out your rhythms and your
routines it's like yeah a matter of fact i got to the point where i was like we don't need a second
car and here's an idea i mean you can role play this for the next week you guys only use one car
see how it goes.
Yeah.
That's a good idea.
As you get the other two listed and just live like that and see how it goes.
And if it works out, keep doing it.
But either way, I'd get that $5,000 card and just have it for now until you upgrade a little bit later with cash.
You're going to see savings on insurance too, which is great.
A lot of savings.
But all the cars are paid off?
Yeah, all the cars are paid off.
The only debt we have is the student loans.
What's the payments on the student loans?
260, it's between like five different student loans.
Comes out to like 267, I think, a month.
Oh, nice.
So that's great.
That's over three grand that you can put towards your savings goals.
Right. As you free up the payment. So I think this can put towards your savings goals. Right.
As you free up the payment.
So I think this is a no brainer.
Okay.
I appreciate it.
Yeah, you got it, man.
That's a fun call.
I did not know Jade was a one car family.
One car family for 10 years.
Wow.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
I mean, even Whitney working at Ramsey, I rarely get to commute with her.
Our schedules are just all over the place.
And now with a baby, it's like, well, you got you got to go home I got to record you guys work in the same
place George you and I could get like rides from people but I just I'm I feel too guilty being like
hey man can I get a ride again you drive me home after work listen I I would take uber like every
once in a while on the weekend we might have an issue and it's like oh just get an uber and I
remember my friend Fred would be like,
why are you Ubering?
Just call, like, we'll drive you.
Like, we'll pick you up.
I'm like, no, it's,
I don't want to burden anybody else with it.
See, that's my thing.
We never viewed it as a burden.
It was just like, all right, yeah, just grab an Uber.
That's why we need John Deloney to be like,
you're not a burden to your friends.
Text him at 3 a.m.
Ask for the ride to the airport.
I'm like, bro.
No, you hit a certain point.
I feel like once you
hit like 37 you can't ask people to help you move anymore thank you cannot like hit your ride like
unless you're baby step two then i'll i might help you move if you're in baby step two oh but once
you're out of that just hire a mover yeah there's levels to that because i'm not moving stairs like
an apartment no i'll help you put some
things in a box well george when a friend breaks something i'm like oh gosh but if the mover does
it i'm getting that money back yeah you can like yeah get funky you know when my buddy joe helps
me move and he breaks something i'm like well that's it was free he was helping for free what
i charge the guy so that part's stressful yeah you have to pay them with something even if you're an
adult you have to have drinks or pizza or like there's got to be some form of payment you can't
just say come help me move absolutely well i was just reading a consumer reports article which i'm
i'm a paying member now jay that's how you know i'm getting old george you're different i'm getting
old i'm next step aarp is up next but they have a great article because we've been telling people the $5,000 car exists.
Yeah, it does.
And Consumer Reports had an article from February 14th.
Best used cars and SUVs for less than $5,000.
There you go.
And you wouldn't be shocked to hear the brands on here.
Can you guess them?
Toyota.
Yep.
Nissan.
Nope.
Ford.
Nope.
I was hoping you'd hit the major two.
Rhymes with ronda hyundai
honda there we go toyota and honda took the top uh definitely and lexus was on there too
and guess what these cars are 20 year old cars i believe you know it's an 06 accord it's the
04 lexus es but you see these on the road for 04 Avalon. 05 Camry. These are invincible cars.
Yeah, they're still on the road.
These cars will outlive me.
100%.
RAV4.
A 2001 Tacoma.
You see a guy in a 2001 Toyota Tacoma, he's going places.
He's hardcore.
He's got work to do.
Yeah.
You see a guy in the brand new F250.
Yeah.
That thing doesn't have a scratch on it, Jade.
That guy's hauling mulch once a year from Lowe's.
That's about the only thing he's doing with that.
You never see like old Volkswagens.
You never see old Volvos.
Yeah.
You ever see a Saturn on the road?
Never.
My guy is still holding on.
If you have a Saturn, I'm sorry.
It's usually like in a Taco Bell drive-thru at 3 a.m.
Like this man has seen some things if he's driving a Saturn around at 3 a.m.
Oh, man.
And he's in for some things if he's at Taco Bell listen these cars exist are they 20 years old yes do they have
148 000 miles yes will they still go another 100 000 yes dang right so don't tell me that
they don't exist just tell me you don't want to drive it this is the ramsey show
what does the future hold for business ask nine experts and you'll get ten different answers.
Economic growth or a recession.
Business taxes will go up or down.
AI will help us work or it will replace us all.
But there's no such thing as a crystal ball.
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enterprise resource planning system. Ramsey Solutions uses NetSuite, and you should too.
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Ramsey. Welcome back to The Ramsey Show.
I'm George Campbell, joined by Jade Warshaw.
Friendly reminder, you can always visit us here at The Ramsey Solutions worldwide headquarters,
just south of Nashville, Tennessee.
If you're ever vacationing or you just want a fun trip, come through.
We're just about a half hour south of downtown Nashville.
We do the show on the glass live.
You can hang out for all three hours.
There's a museum timeline wall,
the Baker Street Cafe
with free baked goods
and coffee,
a bookstore,
a lot of fun.
So make a visit.
We just met a family
with custom cricket shirts
they made.
And the girl's shirt said,
we're on our way to Disney.
Mom made us stop here.
That's so funny.
Which is,
that lands for the funniest
shirt of the day.
Well, it's worth noting
because sometimes, especially if you watch the show on YouTube, it looks like we're like
sitting in our chairs really fast and putting in our in-ears. It's because we go out in the lobby
and meet everybody. Twice an hour. And all the personalities do that, Dave included. So it's a
fun time. We'll sign things, take pictures, just hang out for a moment. And it's always a good
time. So make a trip to Nashville and stop by and see us. Why don't you? It's time for our question of the day. Jade, what do we have? All right. Today's question
comes from Brandon in Georgia. He says, I will graduate college debt-free this semester. Because
of an internship, I will likely receive a full-time job offer of $70,000 a year at a reputable company
with a lot of room to move up that's good how does someone
who leaves college debt-free with a decent income manage their money when it's their first time on
salary i don't have to pay rent i don't want to have to pay i don't want thank you i don't want
to have to pay rent or get a car with debt while also having to save money for retirement at the
same time my biggest fear is wasting money renting
before I feel I'm financially capable to take on buying or mortgaging a home. What's your advice?
I love this. I think this guy's just now getting started. He's got a nice career set up for
himself. The first step is to get on a budget. That's numero uno. If you don't have an every
dollar budget, you need to down one today. free version is amazing but the premium version is even better so i'd say that that'd be his first thing
um he says i don't want to have to pay rent or get a car with debt so my next piece of advice is don't
you know over here we just say that we live a debt-free lifestyle and we draw a line in the
sand and we don't borrow money so for, the next thing is to probably use that great
income to start saving up for a car. And to answer your question about renting, I would rent for the
time being. I'd get a couple of roommates, get a couple of guys and just get used to living that
adult lifestyle, right? You're getting up, you're going to work every morning, you're saving up for
a car, you're on a budget start getting your your your confidence
built that you can live on what you make and then at the right time I would look at buying a home
I'd make sure that I have the right down payment in an area that's right for you with your job
and I would not look at renting as a negative because I feel like here you're kind of feeling
that renting is a negative and I it's not it's just buying you time until you can afford to buy a house the right way.
And that's truly what it is, George.
Yeah.
I'm just exhausted by this narrative that society and parents are telling young people,
which is renting is a sin.
It's a waste of money.
You better get in a home as soon as possible.
And I get the heart behind it.
It's worth meaning.
Yeah.
But then it creates this.
And it means people jump out of college at 22. And they're like, I need to buy a house even though I'm not ready.
Now, luckily our friend Brandon has no debt making 70K a year. That blows my mind. I wasn't
making half of that when I got my first job out of college. And I moved to Nashville and what do
you do? You get some roommates, you get some side hustles. And so I think that's a smart move.
Be ready for the first month deposit,
last month rent, whatever that is, be ready for that financially. So I would just save up a bunch
of cash and maybe work part-time so that when you graduate, even before that first paycheck hits,
you're ready to make the move and go rent somewhere with some roommates.
And renting, George, to your point, it does get a bad stigma and it's not a bad thing. My husband and I rented for
over 10 years before we bought a house and our situation was different. We were trying to pay
off almost half a million dollars of debt. But in many ways, I can liken it to what's going on
right now because the housing market is so expensive that people feel like, quote, I'm
never going to be able to buy a house. And I'm like, you will be able to.
Instead of it taking three years or four years, it could take six or seven or seven or eight
or eight or nine or 10.
Like there is part of this that I just want people to feel encouraged that just because
a journey takes longer doesn't mean you won't make it to the finish line and doesn't mean
it's not worth it to rent until you get there.
Amen.
And last thing I'll say, Brandon, if you're listening,
and I hope you are,
is when you go from making nothing to making $70,000,
the life hack is to keep living like you make nothing.
Keep living on less than you make.
If you can learn to live off of 20 grand when you make 70,
you're going to be unbelievably wealthy.
But for most people, they just fill in the gap.
They make 70, we're just going to spend to 70. But for most people, they just fill in the gap. They make 70,
we're just going to spend to 70. Or they spend 80. That's the American story right there. And so if
you can avoid that, avoid lifestyle creep, avoid the comparison culture and lifestyle, you're going
to be just fine, my friend. So great question. Love that. For any young person that's listening,
someone about to graduate, send them this call. It could change everything.
All right, let's get to the phone lines.
Philadelphia is up next.
Angela joins us there.
Welcome, Angela.
Hi, how are you?
Doing well.
Thank you for having me on the show.
Absolutely.
What's going on today? My question is around student loans and emergency funds.
So I'm older.
I have a pretty decent salary.
I contribute to my 401ks. I have
brokerage accounts. And my issue is my mentality around dumping all of my emergency fund into my
student loan. So I have exactly the amount to pay off my student loan and my emergency fund,
but I am terrified to start over again. How old are you?
Building that emergency fund.
41.
And how much do you have in student loans?
$50,000.
$50,000?
Let me tell you what's terrifying.
Having $50,000 in student loans decades after you graduated?
When did you graduate?
So this is from grad school, and so that would be like 10 years ago.
Ooh, girl!
Listen, I have two ways that i
like explaining this one is just math math it's really just the math for me because if you think
that you have a balance sheet yeah if you if you say that you have fifty thousand dollars and
that's what's keeping you warm at night the math would differ and and it would disagree with you
because technically that you owe that whether you admit it or not you owe
it to I know you know so there's that piece of it I I also yeah but I'm worried about um like
if something were to happen with my house where I literally need like five thousand dollars for
something or so how much do you make every month um about seven I probably bring home about seven
and is it just you?
Yes, it's just me.
Okay. And how much was your student loan payment?
Um, so last year I really, after like just really getting into my finances and making,
just making sure that I'm like doing what I'm supposed to do. I really, I upped the payment. So right now my student loan payment is actually, it's, this isn't something I chose, it's $1,500 a month
because I paid for that. So I really am trying to knock it out, but I'm like, do I just pay this
three to five year course that they have me on? Angela, the whole point that I'm trying to make
to you is you make $7,000 a month. It's just you, your student loan payment alone that you've chosen
to pay is $1,500. Which means next month you're free of $1,500.
How quickly could you save up $5,000 and get that cushion back under you that you want?
Yeah, that's fair. Yep, that's fair. You'd save it so quickly. Plus, I'm guessing there's probably,
if you wanted to get really intense, I know there's more margin somewhere in the $7,000 that you could stack that up even faster. Right now you're living in, the way I like to describe this,
it's like the student loan house.
Like on the inside, it's like modern and beautiful
and the payment's not that much.
And you've got 50,000 saved
and you just think that there's like
this beautiful landscape in front of you.
But the minute you open up the door,
you're like on a cliff.
And like, it's just,
one false move and you're falling off a cliff
and the sun is burning you up and it's just like doomsday out there and as long as you stay in the
house you're fine but your body knows that you're in danger and that you're on this cliff and as
john deloney says all the time your body keeps the score and so i really do think that there's a toll
that we pay mentally and psychologically and physically inside of our bodies for having this debt.
Yeah, and it is definitely more of a mental toll because I've worked so hard.
I'm like, oh, I could just pay this off.
But also it's like, but then you will have nothing.
No, I think that's a lie that your brain is telling yourself.
You will have something.
You'll have your income back and you'll have savings, the same savings that you had in a matter of a few short months
if you get after it. You'll be there. You stack up the money you're putting toward the payment
in an emergency fund with your amazing income. And how much do you have in the brokerage account?
Well, I have some 401k, but I think my brokerage has about $80,000 right now. Oh, my goodness. You're good.
You're fine.
This is paranoia if you don't pay this off today.
We're so proud of you.
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So thank you guys so much for sharing the show. Dakota is up next in Phoenix, Arizona. Dakota,
what is happening? Hey, guys. Thank you for having me on. So I have about $60,000 worth of debt,
and I was hoping to get some guidance from you guys on
where I should go next. Okay. What kind of debt is this?
So I have two car loans, a car for myself and my wife, that total just about $30,000. And I have
a business that my business partner walked out on, so I'm owing him the rest of that money
debt as well. So $30,000 to him.
Like a buyout from the business?
Exactly, yes.
That's $30,000. What's the arrangement for that $30,000?
So I work in
an industry that monthly income
varies just a little bit, so I have the leeway
to pay either $500 or $2,000
a month. Obviously, I'm trying
to get it done as quick as possible, but it's hard to with the varying income.
Interesting.
So what do you bring in every month?
Not just you, but your wife as well.
So we bring in anywhere from $6,000 to $8,000 a month.
Okay.
And these cars, so you said together they're worth $30,000.
Can you split them out for me so I can evaluate them?
Yes, I have a Toyota Tacoma, a 2019 that's $20,000.
And then she just got a new, not new, but it's a used Hyundai Elantra.
It's a 2019 as well.
I think there's $14,000 on that.
Okay.
It's a 34 between the two.
If you were to sell the $20,000 on that. Okay. So $34,000 between the two? If you were to
sell the $20,000 car, would it bring
anything? Or are you
upside down? I think I have $10,000.
I have like $10,000 in equity in it right now.
Okay. I might consider getting out
of one of these car notes, especially
since you've got, you could
get something for one of them.
Yeah, and my only hesitation about doing that
is I live in Arizona, but I work
in California, and I just want to make sure that
I have reliable transportation to get there.
Well, you said if you sold it,
it'd bring $10,000?
Yes. So that's what you would net?
So it's worth $30,000, you owe $20,000?
Yeah, and that's private. I'd probably
get a little bit less selling it to a dealership.
I would somewhere like $7,000.
So there's some money there to get a reliable vehicle, if i mean think about it your wife's vehicle is only
four thousand more so if you were to if you were really up against it you guys could switch for a
little while until you get right side up on this debt yeah luckily she works from home but i just
i feel bad leaving her out here without a car my parents aren't exactly no you'd be getting a ten
thousand dollar car oh oh I got you. Yeah.
Okay.
That makes a lot more sense.
Yeah.
What kind of business are you in?
I own a tattoo shop.
Okay.
And you travel for that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So the shop, luckily it pays for itself.
The shop, so the shop itself has a savings as well, but I just don't want to touch that just in case something does happen.
I know I have to replace the floor soon and right all that i've never really had this
much debt in my life so i'm a little bit uh anxious to say the least no i have no savings
for yourself uh we have a personal savings of somewhere around three or four thousand dollars
okay but i've literally emptied my bank account um i mean i have some other like investments like
somewhere around like eight thousand dollars with a precious metal that I've vaulted with the company, but like that's about it.
Well, I'm getting rid of that.
Yeah, I'd probably dump the precious metal and take $3,000 from your pile in savings
and go get yourself a reliable car with cash after you sell yours. And what's your payment
on that?
My monthly payment on my truck is $600 a month, probably $800 total
with insurance. So you'll free up that
money as soon as you sell this
thing. Yeah.
Which is going to add a whole bunch to your income every
month, which will help you get rid of the business debt
and get rid of her car loan, and so you can see how this
thing snowballs.
Yeah. I'm so anxious
not to have that security net,
because that's all the cash I have.
I don't want to touch the business.
Security net?
You've got $64,000 in debt.
That makes me anxious.
Yeah, that too.
Not a piddly savings account.
Yeah, yeah, true.
So I'm getting rid of the precious metals.
I'm cashing out on that.
You'll be lucky to get,
I mean, precious metals aren't a great quote investment,
so you'll be lucky to get out of that what you put into it.
What'd you say it was?
$8,000?
Yeah.
Listen, you take that money, you take $3,000 and you're, I mean, you're almost out of this car note with your wife.
You sell your car, you take that $10,000, buy yourself something in cash.
This is happening really quickly with the cars.
And then you've got, you're on the hook for $30,000.
And then with that, you freed up $600 from your car note.
How much is her car note?
I think it's like $270 a month.
Okay.
So you said with insurance, $670.
So you've got an extra $1,000 that you're going to bring to the table relatively soon
to pay off this $30,000.
Okay.
That's not bad.
So I would set an aggressive goal that scares you just a little bit,
where you're like, all right, by this date,
I will be completely debt-free if I just commit to this plan.
Okay.
What do you think a reasonable, like, four, five months, like, that intense?
Once you have the $30K left for the business debt, then go, all right,
I can put, you know, $4K a month towards this and be done in seven and a half months.
And so it depends
on when you make your budget using every dollar that will show you exactly how much margin you
should have if you follow the budget okay cool so it's going to be you know a few months where
you're like we can't go out to eat we got to cut some subscriptions we got to sell things laying
around that have been collecting dust some old tattoo shop equipment we no longer use and let
the fact that you let the fact that you only have a thousand dollars saved to be the thing that
just lights the fire under your butt to get to to keep going intensely at this right like you said
it makes you feel like you're out there to only have a thousand dollars saved and it should
it should make you feel like holy moly i gotta get my life together yeah no doubt and you're
you're a tattoo artist i assume assume? Yes, that's correct.
So can you make any extra side money? Oh, no. I mean, I'm sure once I get the business,
you know, or I get rid of the car payment, one or the other, I'll be able to throw some extra
income from the business towards that loan as well. But could you open, let's say, Sunday
afternoons? I'm going to do some extra hours. Oh, yeah, yeah. Right now I'm working five days a
week, but I try to come home as often as I can to see my wife because I'll leave this year maybe
five days every two weeks because of the split between the business partner and all that. You
know, I was supposed to be two weeks on, two weeks off. Yeah, I'd figure out a way to create a more
stable life where you're not having to travel as much. Yeah, yeah. That should be part of this
getting financial stability is how do I just change my lifestyle? Yeah, yeah. That should be part of this getting financial stability
is how do I just change my lifestyle?
Yeah, what does it look like to do tattoos in your area?
I mean, I'm so sorry.
That's okay.
I mean, we stay pretty busy as a shop.
I make $150 an hour, and I typically do two tattoos a day.
But obviously, with economic slowing, things have kind of taken a little step back, unfortunately.
Nobody has stimulus checks anymore, so it's not as busy as it was.
Yeah, I see what you're saying.
So for me, that looks like understanding, okay, how long am I going to let myself be in a situation where I'm not making enough to make a living? And what can you do in the meantime to fill in that gap?
Are you investing at all right now?
My precious metals were the only investment that I really had.
Okay. I would pause all investing until you get this debt cleaned up. Once you have the debt
cleaned up, then we have to build a fully funded emergency fund of three to six months of expenses. So if your expenses are
$4,000 a month, let's call it six months, you need 24 grand in that account so that you have
a force field between you and life, and then you never have to touch debt again.
Yeah, because I know the shop has at least like four or five months where it can operate just on
savings alone, and then yeah, just my personal stuff, I maybe have like four or five months uh where it can operate just on savings alone and then yeah just my personal stuff i maybe have like one or two months good between everything i have but
yeah okay yeah the similarities between your personal life and business are strong where
you go all right if i can run this thing debt free with a pile of money in the bank to protect me
it's going to be a lot more peaceful i still had questions because he's got he's got the shop but
he's traveling is he just traveling to do individual tattoos for Dakota uh for singular tell me if I'm wrong but you're going to the
other shop to do tattoos uh no when I'm not in Arizona it's just spending time with my wife
uh and then uh when I go back home I work so the shop is not near your wife so there's the problem
we need to move your family to where your work is. That's what we need to be looking at in the future.
How far away are they?
It's about four hours.
Goodness gracious.
Why not just start a tech? There, there, there.
Okay.
Can you start a shop right by your house?
Unfortunately not.
Most of my clientele that I've built, I've had to be in California for 10 years now.
And starting over, I'll be sitting around waiting.
Dude, time to build some new clientele.
This is not a life that's sustainable, man.
Thanks for the call.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Welcome back to The Ramsey Show.
I'm George Campbell, joined by Jade Warshaw.
Reminder that we've got some great shows on The Ramsey Network when you're done with this one.
So check them out at our website, RamseySolutions.com.
We've got the Rachel Cruz show, Ken Coleman show, Dr. John Deloney show.
I've got a Smart Money Happy Hour with Rachel Cruz.
That's a fun one.
We're recording right after we're done with this show.
So that'll be a good time.
And then a YouTube channel that I launched less than a year ago that's gone gangbuster.
So check it all out.
We have no shortage of content.
You can't point at us and go, those Ramsey people, just not enough. No, it's gone gangbuster. So check it all out. We have no shortage of content. You can't point
at us and go, those Ramsey people, just not enough.
No, it's a wide variety. Hours a day.
And Jade will soon
one day, hopefully, have a show.
I can't wait to see what it is. Listen, I got a
gleam in my eye. Just let me be a guest. That's all
I ask for. Of course. Hey, I'm going to be on your show.
Remember the little people. That's right.
Jade has made an appearance on
the George Campbell YouTube channel. People loved it. Right, right. Alright, made an appearance on the George Campbell YouTube channel.
People loved it.
Right, right.
All right, let's go to the phone lines.
Frederick joins us in San Diego.
What's going on, Frederick?
Hi, guys.
Thanks for having me.
I purchased a home in 2021 for $500,000 with a 2.5 interest rate,
and it's now appreciated to $750,000.
Hey. I'm thinking about selling it and it's now appreciated to $750,000. Hey!
So I'm thinking about selling it and getting a bigger home because my family's grown.
Aha.
Okay, how many bedrooms is your current home?
It's three beds and two and a half baths,
and we have our second child actually due this week, probably today or tomorrow, actually.
Whoa!
That's exciting.
Yeah.
Yeah, very exciting.
And just thinking about getting into a four bedroom, my wife and I are hybrid workers,
so things are getting a little cramped here and our backyard's a little small. So just
think about taking that equity, rolling it into a house a little bit more north and getting more
house. What would that do? Have you ran the numbers out as far as monthly payment and what percentage of your monthly payment it might be?
So looking at the houses, if we're doing a $750,000 house, roll the equity in, we still owe right around the same.
But the interest rates being like 6.5 to 7.5% now, my monthly payment would go up maybe like $300.
Okay.
Is that a 30-year or a 15?
That's a 30.
I know you guys love 15.
Aha!
Got him. Well, what would it look like
since you guys are making this move anyways
to move to that 15-year?
What percentage of your income
would that be?
Oh, man. I haven't done the math
to be honest on a 15. I'd crunch it. percentage of your income would that be of your take-home pay oh man i haven't done the math to
be honest on a 15 it'd probably be almost i'd crunch it yeah and it's not to be a rule follower
i just i think the goal should not just be to upgrade a home but to be completely debt-free
and own that home outright and the fastest way to do that and the cheaper way to do that is with a
15-year not in payment but as far as what you'll pay in interest, the interest rate will likely be lower. And so I think long-term, you'll be grateful you did that.
As long as you guys are in a good financial spot, do you have no debt with an emergency fund?
We have an emergency fund, but we do have two cars.
Oh, this equation is getting worse and worse, Frederick. Are you regretting the call?
No, I really do think that, you know, what George and I are saying, we just want to set
you up for success financially.
So I would look into paying off these cars before we make that move and get under an
even more stable financial footing.
And then I would not upgrade house unless I was also willing to upgrade to a
15 year fixed rate mortgage, which for you is, let's be honest, that's going to feel very,
it's going to feel like whiplash because you're used to having that lower mortgage monthly payment.
You're looking at the monthly payment and we're all about, like you said, George,
paying this thing off in the long haul. When we look at a car, we never go, well,
what's the lowest payment? That's broke people talk. People go, well, what is the total cost of the car and can I afford it?
And so obviously we don't yell at you for the 15 year fixed mortgage, but I think, you know,
looking at what it would take to get rid of these cars and what's in your emergency fund,
that would be a good first step. So how much are the car loans total?
So we have two vehicles. I think total we owe right around 65 and what's your household
income um i make 100 and my wife makes right around 90 awesome so we have a great income
but we got a lot of car man that's a lot of payment is that a thousand bucks a month in
payments at least yeah yeah we're pretty much right there. The other caveat to this I was thinking is I could rent out my house and then just rent out. No, I don't think so.
That's a lot of risk and stress in my book, taking on two mortgages and hoping that it all works out
perfectly. We've taken that call where it doesn't work out perfectly. And so that's why we steer
people away from that one. What does it look like for you guys? I'm just looking at what you said.
You have a $500,000 house.
It's three bedroom, two and a half bath.
And you're about to have your second child?
Correct.
Okay.
So one bedroom is for you.
Your two kids share a bedroom and you've got a bedroom that's an office.
Is that the plan right now?
But my wife also works from home too.
So it's just...
Okay. So then's just... Okay.
So then that means somebody's in the living room
or someone's in the...
You guys are having a...
Working in the laundry room.
Yeah, exactly.
I personally, and this is, you know,
you're a grown man,
you'll go away and do what you feel.
But I personally would not...
I've had two 15-year fixed rate mortgages
and I'm astonished how quickly you
paid off because of how much of the payment is going towards the principal as opposed to interest
every month and i think that you'll just be blown away and you'll end up paying likely six figures
less in interest on the 15-year versus the 30-year when you crunch the numbers and that will make you
want to throw up saying how much money you're throwing away to the lender to bless them so that's another reason
i'd look at that but frederick you told me a 15 year man that'd be tight and i'm going well if
you freed up the thousand dollars from the car payments that 15 year payment wouldn't seem so
scary would it no no definitely probably way more reasonable and that's where i go like i think you
guys can do the 50, you make 190.
I think it's reasonable to do that 50 in a year, but we need to get rid of these cars.
And if that means we got to sell them and downgrade for now, I mean, if you have enough
equity and you can have some net profit out of this, it might not be a bad idea.
How much do you have in the emergency fund?
We have right around three months worth.
So I think we have close to 20,000 right now.
Okay.
What do you think you'd get for these cars?
Do you think you'd get 65 or 70 or 75?
Well, so we would probably be under on the cars
because we purchased them brand new.
They'd appreciate the fastest when they're brand new.
Okay. Well,
I mean, with our parameters, there's nothing wrong with keeping these cars, but I think it's holding you back from that next step, which you told me you urgently want to get into a house and you got
the new baby. To me, the baby trumps the fancy car, and therefore I might still consider selling
those cars and purchasing something with cash. Even if you can get what you put into it and you use 19 out of your 20 in savings to go get you two cheaper cars, you both work at home,
not a ton of travel happening, that might be the move so that you can get into that house faster.
I think so. And honestly, I'm just looking at numbers. If you're looking at a $700,000 house,
that's what you're looking at, right? And you're putting the 250 down that you're
getting from the sale of the other house. You're rolling it all over, right?
Yep.
Okay. 15-year fixed rate. I don't know what your mortgage rates, you know, I don't know what the
rates are and everything, taxes and everything, but I'm looking at Tennessee, 6.7% mortgage rate,
taxes, fees. It puts you at $4,900 a month. And I'm looking at what you said, $190K is your gross?
Yeah, what's your current mortgage?
Current mortgage, I'm paying $3,300 a month.
You're saying it would go up to about $4,100 on a 30-year?
Right around, yeah, I think it was at $3,900 was going to be the...
Okay.
And this puts you at $4,900, so worth $1,000 more.
And that's exactly where your car payments are, if not a little less.
And so I think this is very doable,
but we just have to trade in paying lenders for these cars
into let's build equity and get this house paid off.
That's the trade-off, and that's a worthy trade-off.
Okay. All right. Thank you, guys.
Absolutely. Thanks for the call, man. I hope you do it because I'm excited. I get excited when I
see people trade in the payments they were making. We say, if you want to do interest right,
wealthy people earn interest, broke people pay interest. That's a big difference. And so when
you get rid of those payments, you free up $1,000. For most people, it's more than that when you add
up all of the debt payments in their life. And instead, you use that to build wealth and pay off the house
and invest. The numbers start to just boggle your mind. Boggle the mind. Yeah, that's so true.
And if you don't believe me, go into ramseysolutions.com, use our free investment calculator
and add up what your debt payments are and put that as the monthly contribution
and do that from your age up through 62, 65. Minds blown.
Eight to 10% return. Thank me later. You'll be like, oh my gosh, let's pay off the debt today,
honey. We could be bajillionaires. Yeah. It's so worth it. I'm just thinking about owning a house
in 15 years as opposed to 30. Absolutely. You know, don't give yourself wiggle. That's what
you're here. Well, you're going to give yourself wiggle room. Uh-uh. We got the emergency fund.
Get out of here with that wiggle room.
Miss me with that.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions, it's The Ramsey Show, where we help people
build wealth, do work that they love, and create amazing relationships.
I'm George Campbell, joined by Jade Warshaw.
This is your show America. Give us a call
at 888-825-5225.
You can't text
us. You can't tweet us. You can't
text us. You can't TikTok us. You gotta
call the number with your handy dandy
phone. It still makes calls I
found out. It does. Still do it. It's not
just an internet. Although I'll be honest I don't like
when I get calls now. Unless it's from my
mom or my wife or grandma, I don't pick up.
Yeah, don't call me.
And definitely don't call me and then text me.
Call me after you've called me.
Wow.
I don't like that.
I didn't know Jade felt that way, but now we know.
888-825-5225.
Malaysia kicks us off in San Antonio.
What's going on, Malaysia?
Hi, guys.
So my husband and I are about over $100,000 in debt,
and we have a baby on the way.
And all kinds of debt just kind of overwhelmed
and don't know where to start.
What kind of debt do you have?
Can you list it out for us?
So about $40,000 in credit cards, $20,000 in student loans, which
haven't kicked in yet because I'm still currently in school. Okay. So I haven't started paying on
those yet. When do you graduate? Next 2025. Okay. Keep going. And then he has a truck. We're both
small business owners, so he has a truck that he uses.
He does general contracting.
That's $35,000 he just got six months ago.
And then we have a Mazda that we're about to finish paying off.
That's $2,000 left on that.
I have a Jeep that's $25,000.
And then with his business, he kind of fell behind in paying the taxes.
So from 2022, he owes the IRS about $5,000.
And then this past year, he is going to have to pay taxes at the end of the year because he didn't pay throughout the year.
And then with the insurance, we made too much to qualify for MediAid, so we have to pay for health insurance.
And then the max out-of-pocket for the delivery is going to end up costing us about $9,000.
Okay, that's your max out-of-pocket.
Okay, good.
So we got well over $100,000.
Yeah.
Okay.
Go ahead, George.
I'm getting rid of every car on this list.
Okay, that's what I'm looking at.
Except for that one that you got $2,000 paid off.
I don't believe that he needs a $35,000 truck to do general contract work.
No way.
Do you agree or disagree, Malaysia?
I do agree.
He was actually using the Mazda prior, so that's why we ended up getting the Jeep,
is because the Mazda is like kind of
trashed out at this point yeah it has a lot of miles on it he like ran it into the ground and
then he's like okay I need to I need to get actual work truck okay but he didn't need to spend 35,000
let's be honest about that and he didn't need to go 35,000 into debt yeah so some of this we can
clean up some of it we have to crawl out of what did you spend $40,000 into debt. Yeah. So some of this we can clean up, some of it we have to crawl out of.
What did you spend $40,000 on with the credit cards?
That was accrued over years, just like a bunch of different things.
I used to have an RV, and I ended up putting a down payment on the credit cards,
and then I sold the RV, but then I still came off the credit cards.
And then when we got engaged, we bought the ring with credit cards.
Girl.
Just a bunch of stuff.
Can we both agree that your life is stressful
and that you guys work too hard to live this insanity?
Yes, absolutely.
What are you earning?
What are the two of you earning?
Tell me yours and tell me his, please.
So my business, I just started like maybe less than a year, like maybe six to eight months ago.
So I'm trying to still figure out the numbers.
No, no, no, no, no, no. That's an excuse. What have you been earning?
On average, when you take all the average months together and average them out, what would you say that you earn per month?
What are you paying yourself?
Maybe like $2 two thousand a month okay and what about your husband um because his varies as well um it's just it's hard to say because you don't said no it's not what did he make last month
um so it's been slow because
it's like winter time still but we're start it's starting to warm up and pick up a little bit more
um neither of you should be running a business if you don't know how much you made last month
last month he made about five thousand okay here's what i think's going on um and i'm just
going to call a spade a spade i'm'm glad you called. We want to help you.
But when I ask somebody how much their business made and they go,
ah,
it's because in that moment you're realizing I'm,
this is,
this is part time or this is a hobby because you're realizing in that moment that although you're passionate about it,
it's not making enough to sustain your household.
And I think with your business,
as much as you love it and as much as it's a passion right now
you're making $24,000 a year before taxes and so it's it's not a business yet it's something that
you're good at and it's something you love but as long as you're making two thousand bucks a month
you got to have a full-time job on top of that this right now this is the side hustle and you've
got to add another job what are you going to school for?
So it's like multidisciplinary studies, which is focusing in business, communication, and health.
And what's that going to do for you as far as your career?
Well, because I have my business and I feel like it's a good backing towards me being in business myself. Like, I've been learning a lot more,
taking the classes that I have been taking,
and then the communication behind it, because I'm, like, you know, the person running everything,
I'm learning about...
But why was now the time to go into student loan debt
to get this degree?
I had started that prior.
I've been, like, doing that along the way,
and I'm just kind of like, I want to finish and get my degree.
Cause I,
cause I went to,
um,
I get my associates and I was like,
well,
I just want to finish and get my bachelor's.
So what's the plan?
You told me you graduate in 2025.
What's the plan to pay for school from now until then for the next year?
Just like,
I don't know.
Just kind of.
Yeah,
you do. Hey, I got to call this out. You got to stop saying you don't know just kind of yeah you do that's what got us here hey i gotta call this out
you gotta stop saying you don't know because you do know you just don't want to say you know that
you were planning on taking out student loans the same way that you knew that your pay wasn't enough
to qualify as a full-time job in the same way that you know that your husband's pay is not
enough to qualify as a full-time job don't say you don't know because we can't solve the problem unless we are willing to look at it and go
this is the problem say it out loud and then you know the problem right now is debt and not only
debt but you guys have not decided to stop going into debt yet because you've still decided I'm
going to take on debt to go you know to finish my education so let's just be honest about it we're
not mad at you.
We just want to be honest because we can't help you unless we're honest. And the same thing with
your income. You guys have got to bring in more money because here's the thing. If you choose to
keep borrowing money, that income better be on it because who's going to make the payments,
right? So what we want is to get you to a point where you're not borrowing money,
you're paying off your existing debt, and you're using your income that is increasing over time in order to do that.
When does the baby do?
Okay.
September.
Okay.
Right now, we're in stork mode.
We've got to save up cash because you guys have none of it, and we need to make sure that we can cash flow all these medical expenses so we don't go further into debt.
In the meantime, I'm looking into selling all these cars and getting whatever we can get with cash to get us by until then.
I want this baby to grow up in a debt-free home that is not filled with chaos.
And I don't know that I can say that right now
because it feels like your life is going to be chaos
unless we make some drastic changes.
Yeah.
And start paying your taxes.
Quarterly estimated payments to the IRS.
There's no need for this to be a surprise every single April that we're going to be $5,000 in debt to the IRS.
We don't want that.
Thanks for the call, Malaysia.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Welcome back to The Ramsey Show.
I'm George Campbell, joined by Jade Warshaw.
Let's face it, guys.
Taxes are confusing, and they're no fun. And if you buy into some of the tax service ads out there,
you'll believe you'll never get a grasp on taxes and you shouldn't even try.
Or maybe even worse, they suck you into offers that won't help you win with money.
But we think you deserve the truth around here.
So here's today's tax tip.
Are you ready?
A tax refund is not a bonus.
It's not?
Sorry to burst your tax bubble there, Jade.
It's a refund, meaning it was your money all along and you earned that money.
You just happened to loan it to Uncle Sam interest-free because of your generosity.
Wow.
So if you get a big tax refund, sure, you can have some fun with it and spend it and
go on a vacation and buy stuff you don't need.
Or you could, I don't know, make sure that you advance your financial
journey. There you go. And apply it to your next baby step. That's the smart thing to do. So here's
what you need to do. Adjust your paycheck withholdings if you keep getting these big refunds
so this doesn't happen again. You want to get as close to zero. So people that are like, I owed
$7. I'm like, that's a win. Let's celebrate. Yeah. I got a refund of $4. That's great. That's a win.
Let's celebrate. That means you're doing it4. That's a win. Let's celebrate.
That means you're doing it right. So if you haven't already filed, make sure you work with
a service you can trust. If you've got a complicated tax situation, get a Ramsey Trusted
Tax Pro on your side. And if you're comfortable filing on your own with the software out there,
check out Ramsey Smart Tax. It's not like the other guys, Jade. It's low upfront pricing,
no hidden fees, no agendas. We're not going to other guys, Jade. It's low upfront pricing, no hidden fees,
no agendas. We're not going to bait and switch you at the end because you had an extra form.
Right. It's exactly what we say it's going to do, and it's exactly how much you think you were
going to pay. So go to ramseysolutions.com slash tax, and we can help you figure out what situation
is best for you. That's ramseysolutions.com slash tax.
It's a lot of money on the table for some people.
That is. You getting your taxes done yet?
Yeah, everything's turned in and just waiting to hear that magic number.
Did we make it?
Did we do it?
That's right.
Think about it, though.
Think about the tax returns you've gotten in the past and divide it by 12.
And essentially, that's the money that you would receive back into your monthly flow,
which is...
So if you get a six grand refund, that just means you need 500 bucks back in your life
every month that the government hung on to.
That's a raise.
Especially when everyone's feeling like money's tight.
But you're cheering about your refund.
I don't think people realize that it's their money all along.
I think they think it's the government giving them some gift.
It reminds me of that old commercial.
It's my money and I want it now.
Yeah.
Good job, George.
Is that J.G. Wentworth?
J.G. Wentworth.
I love it. I think they're still around. Good for them. That's that J.G. Wentworth? J.G. Wentworth. I love it.
I think they're still around. Good for them. That's so good. Good job, George. Holding it down. J.G.?
All right, Matthew's up next in Raleigh, North Carolina. Matthew, how can we help you today?
Yeah, I'm Matthew Davis. A pleasure to talk to y'all online. So I'm 43 years old.
I've been working in law enforcement for the last 20 years.
My wife, I'm married and have a wife and two kids.
I have a 12-year-old daughter and a 6-year-old daughter.
I'm completely debt-free and have been for the last six months, including my house.
That's awesome.
Wow. That's awesome. So my question is, with pension plans, I got about eight and a half years to I can fully retire.
And my pension will be at least $5,500 a month at my current pace right now.
It'll probably be higher than that.
Okay. But, um, so how does that factor in to my retirement, like my 401k,
because I'm currently saving, um, substantial amount of money because basically after I paid
off all my debt, I just kicked it into overdrive with savings and everything. What's your nest egg? Um, so currently I have, my wife has
200 and 401k. I have 135 in my 401k. Okay. Um, the Roth RA we have, she has 13,500. I have about 18,
or excuse me, 8,000 in my Roth. Okay. Um, we have 75,000 in just savings accounts. Okay. So is the question,
you said in eight years, you'll be able to retire from law enforcement. So that puts you at 51?
Yeah, it should be 51, 52. And what's the plan after that when you stop law enforcement?
To go get another job.
Okay.
Something that I don't have to work nights and weekends, and that'll be more on my schedule.
But, you know, I plan to keep working until I'm at least 60, 60, between 60 and 65.
What's your household used to earning?
My wife currently makes about 93. My base is 94. I work a substantial amount of extra duty.
Last year, we made $247,000. Okay, awesome. And what's that translate to monthly?
I don't know that number.
So it varies because some months I work more off-duty than other months.
What's a round number?
Like 15 grand a month ends up in your bank account or what?
Yeah, that sounds about right.
Okay.
So we got a good financial snapshot here so what's your what's your overarching
question so my overarching question is like i feel like i have to keep working 80 hours a week
in order to keep living the lifestyle that we're living um and it's not just like
like to keep saving at the the rate and i don't know if the saving at the same rate that I'm
saving at currently is completely necessary with the pension plan that I do have, or if I'm just
kind of working extra just to build a nest egg and I'm losing out on time with my family a little
bit. Well, I would crunch the numbers using, you know, we have an investment calculator on our
website and go, all right, I got, we have this much in our 401ks and IRAs.
If we contribute this much per month, even at a very conservative, you know, average return of,
let's say 8%, how much would we have by 51 or 65 or whenever you plan to keep working? And that
will help you get a full picture of pension plus this amount on investments. If we pulled this
percentage off each year, we could live off of this.
But it sounds like you guys have a pretty hefty lifestyle, even with your hefty income.
How far are you from paying your home off?
You said it's paid off?
Yeah, my house is paid off.
So I'm wondering where all this $15,000 is going every month.
Basically into savings.
Like I'm putting $23, 000 a year into my 401k my wife's
putting 19 000 in her 401k okay we're maxing out our roth um and then 247 sounds like a lot but
when you have taxes that come out of that you know so there's a lot of taxes that come involved. That's true.
Our monthly spending is about $2,500 a month just in bills,
like as far as cell phones, groceries, power, taxes, insurance,
stuff like that.
Have you looked?
Can you tell me what percentage of your income is going every month towards investing?
My guess is about 20-something percent.
It's about 28 to 30 percent.
OK, here's the thing. We would call that you're on baby step seven and at baby step seven, you're allowed to jump up your retirement to whatever percentage rate you see fit, whatever feels right.
And if you're feeling like, oh, my gosh, like we're up, we're up against it, like we're not living life.
I've got to make 80 hours and work 80 hours a week in order to make this thing happen.
That's a sign to pull back.
You've done an excellent job.
You have no debt.
Your home is paid for.
You've got great benefits from your work.
I think that maybe in your mind, it's like we're playing catch up and we've got to go, go, go, go, go.
But you have the ability to pull your foot off the pedal on this a little bit.
Yeah, that's my problem.
It's like I don't know when to pull the foot off the pedal because I know it's like they say you need to have like 10 times into your retirement accounts or whatever else.
But with the way it factors with my pension, I don't know how that works out.
Well, I mean, you have your pension plus you'll have your nest eggs when that time comes.
Because here's the thing,
you're not stopping working at 51.
You're just not going to be in law enforcement
when you're 51.
So you're still going to have an income.
That's still money that you have the ability
to put 15 plus percentage of away in retirement.
And, you know, a good rule of thumb,
I think that you should work
with an investment professional. But a good rule of thumb, George, is if you can live off the interest that your
nest egg is generating, plus your pension, plus your social security, obviously you could account
for inflation at some point in there, but that's a good place to start. So if you retire and by the
time you retire, you've got $700,000, you've been making a 10% rate of return. You have to ask
yourself, okay, that's $70,000 a year plus my pension, plus my wife's, if she has anything,
and then plus your social security. So that's just a very broad way to look at it, but work
with an investment professional and get yourself some peace of mind. That's the key. Okay, that
sounds great. Don't freak out about it, man. You're on the right track. It may be time to dial
back a little bit and enjoy the fruits of your labor.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Welcome back to The Ramsey Show.
I'm George Campbell, joined by Jade Warshaw,
and we've got a special guest on the debt-free stage.
Jaden joins us from Frederick, Maryland.
How are you, Jaden?
I'm so good.
I'm so excited to be here. Yay! Thanks for making the trip. Yeah How are you, Jaden? I'm so good. I'm so excited
to be here. Thanks for making the trip. Yeah, it's quite a trip. I'm excited. And you're here
because you're debt free and we're celebrating. I am. Yes, it's been a few months. So luckily,
I've had a little bit of an experience with it. But yeah, it feels so good. It's still fresh.
It's still fresh. It is still fresh. We can hear it in your voice. You're still excited.
I'm so excited. It's crazy to be here.
On the other side of it, you look for so long and you just wait.
You work really hard and yeah, it's here.
And you made it through.
It's very difficult to get on the debt-free stage.
We get thousands of applications a year and we only take the best.
So you are the best, apparently.
I wasn't at first.
You made it the second time.
It's pretty intense. Yeah, I made it the second time. Yeah. Well,
how much have you paid off? I paid off just under $132,000. Wow. All student loans. Let's go.
Thank you. That's amazing. How long did that take? Just under 15 months. Whoa. Wow. Okay.
What was your range of income during that time? I started at $41,500, which was crazy. And almost
all of them were private student loans through Sally Mae. So
I looked at the amount that I was going to be paying and I was like, oh my gosh,
there's no way I can do it. Called the people who I knew were good with money. They had been
through financial peace. And yeah, then eventually, sorry, I'm going through the whole story already.
But I get your income up from 41? Yes. $112,000. That's an approximate, yeah.
Wow.
What'd you study?
I have a bachelor's degree in international relations and Spanish and a minor in history.
So liberal arts.
I'm working on studying for my LSAT to go to law school for free.
So that is cool.
Yes, that's the goal.
And what are you doing now for work?
I'm a legal assistant.
I do paralegal work.
That's awesome.
So you're in the legal field.
Yeah.
That's exciting. Good field. Thanks. And you paid off all of those loans in 15 months. Are the numbers adding
up for me? Okay. So there is one small detail. So I was living with my uncle and my aunt who
had previously went through financial peace. And they actually gifted me $19,500 to pay off
my federal loans. That's awesome. Yeah. They were more than
helpful. I can't even express how thankful I am. That's awesome. And the rest was just
hustle and grind. How'd you do it? Yeah, I served. I went to work during the day. My work,
I work for an intellectual property firm. So it's a lot of overtime if you get in applications that
are urgent. And then, so I was able to boost my income that way. And then I just worked like crazy serving. I worked six days a week at a restaurant and I doubled on weekends.
So it was a lot. Yeah. So you're saying that if you work extra, you can get out of debt.
Yeah. That's the key. Believe it or not. That and a little self-discipline.
Man, tell everybody because a lot of people think it's impossible to pay off student loans. 132,000
at that. I know. I know. I looked at it whenever I first started.
So I was watching the shows for a bit once I had talked to my uncle,
talked to my aunt Liz.
And yeah, I just, I couldn't find anyone who was in the same boat as me
who had so many private student loans.
My monthly minimums were almost $2,000.
I know about that.
Yeah.
I know about that, girl.
I know it's nice to hear your story.
Yeah, it was really intense. And and single paying it off by myself. And you know, um, I
actually graduated a year early. So all my friends were still in school, which was great. I mean,
it's cool to go visit them and stuff, but at the same time I was working all the time. So I'm
seeing them live their lives. I'm an adult now. Yes. I know it hit really hard. So how old are
you? I'm 23. So 23 years old. You utilize the resources
at your disposal. Your aunt and uncle, they're like, Hey, we're here for you. You get two jobs,
two jobs working overtime. Yeah. Wow. Yeah. To push it to six figures. And that helped you knock
this out quickly. You were intense. So what got you on this Ramsey plan? Um, so I was at school,
um, again, yeah, I was just, I was so stressed. I was shaking literally because
I was so scared of that number. Two thousand dollars a month. How was I going to afford rent
and groceries and that? And then I'm saving for a lot, you know, like it's just impossible. So
I called them. I knew that they had done a plan. I didn't really know any of the details. I've heard
Dave's name before, but that was about it. Yeah. Yeah. And I knew they
were good with money. Gave them a call. I said, hey, this is the situation I'm in. And they were
so helpful. I love it. Yeah. Day one, we pretty much broke it down. I moved from Pittsburgh to
Maryland, Frederick, and I just worked. That was pretty much it. They were like, you got this girl.
So they just showed you the Ramsey plan and you were like, all right, fine, I'll do this. Yeah.
Yeah. You're smart. They're good with money. with money I'll trust them yeah so the question we get I know the
question I get all the time is how do you stay motivated and so I'm sure so many people want
to know how Jaden did you stay motivated like you said all your friends are out here living
yeah that's life like what did you do I think the main thing was just uh the two of them my friends
honestly were really helpful too
Even though they were living their lives. They said they were like girl. You are amazing. You should totally do this
They weren't doing it, which is totally fine. Everyone moves at their own pace
um, but yeah, they were so everyone was so nice and helpful and honestly, I think a lot of it is just self-discipline like you really
Just have to I think when you see those numbers and you're terrified
And that's your only option. That's exactly you're terrified and that's your only option, that's
exactly what it is. It's your only option. I don't know. I would have literally just,
you can't even bankrupt student loans. So there's nothing else I could do.
And then you see the numbers working for you and you see the progress.
Yes.
You get excited. There's light at the end of the tunnel and it's not an oncoming train.
Right.
That's exciting.
Yes. Initially I thought, um, whenever I was going to undergrad, I had always thought, I was thought I was like this will be fine I'm gonna go straight through to law school I'm gonna come out
attorneys make good money I'll be fine a not all attorneys make a ton of money b there I life
didn't happen as planned per usual you know this is it should have been expected but it wasn't so
you said you had to yeah you know make some sacrifices what were some of the biggest no's you had to make on this journey as a young girl who's like I want to live my life in
YOLO too yeah so my friends went on spring break trips it sounds so silly saying it out loud it's
not though because it's life yeah it really is they were going on trips to Nashville and to the
beach and my family was taking trips together and every single, even if
we went on a family trip and it was covered, it was still, that's money that's being taken away
from paying towards the loans because you're not working during that time. So, and I would say
other than that, I think it was really challenging just not seeing, I saw my aunt and uncle a lot,
which was great, but you're not seeing your family, like you're my household family a lot,
which. Wow. And you survived to tell the tale. Yeah, I sure did. Here I am. And now you'll be the one
who's like, guys, want to go on this trip? And they're like, we're broke. Well, now they'll be
coming to you to figure out how to pay off their debt. Some of them already have been asking me
about it. So it's been great. Yeah. You're going to inspire a lot of people, including millions
listening who are like, I'm a young single girl with student loans. I could be like Jaden. Yeah,
you can totally do this. You just have to work really hard.
And it will be over.
Yeah, it will be over before you know it.
Do you have some cheerleaders along this journey?
My aunt and my uncle were really my biggest cheerleaders. They sound amazing.
They were seriously, I could not have been more blessed.
But my friends, my family, people say that they have a lot of naysayers, people calling
you crazy.
I luckily did not run into that at all.
That's awesome.
Yes. Yeah. So it was amazing it was great you're you're different there are there are grown
people who make more money than you do who they keep their loans around forever until you know
they start out low when they work themselves up to 132k and you just said not me no not me
oh love it thank you thank you it's, making six figures, bright future ahead of you.
We're so proud of you.
Can you tell us quick, how do you go to law school for free?
Because that's your plan.
Yeah, yeah.
You pre-decided this is what's going to happen.
Well, yeah.
So initially that wasn't the plan.
Luckily, after going through everything, absolutely.
So I'm studying for my LSAT right now.
And if you get a high enough score on your LSAT, basically it's about that.
There's other softer factors as well.
They have to take into account. But yeah, just schools just throw the full ride at you because they want the person who's a brilliant prodigy. I wouldn't say they throw
it at you, but yeah, yeah, you definitely, you can get into law school. I think you're, I feel
like you're the type of person who will just do it because you're so focused. You're so determined.
It's what got you out of debt and it's what's going to get you through law school debt free.
Yeah. You just have to be. I love it.
Very impressive.
Thank you.
I'm so proud of you.
Very impressive.
Thank you, guys.
Well, we've got every dollar premium for you a whole year, and we're going to give you
another one to gift to someone else to get their journey started, because we know getting
a plan for every one of those dollars is the key.
Spend less, make more, throw it at the debt, do what you got to do, and bada-bing, bada-boom,
you'll become debt-free like Jaden.
All right, the moment we've been waiting for it's jayden from frederick maryland 132 000 in student loans paid off in 15
months making 41 all the way up to 112 with the side hustles and serving six days a week
doubles on the weekends count it down jayden let's hear a debt-free scream. Three, two, one. I'm debt-free!
Yeah!
Love that debt-free vibrato in there. Yeah, she had a little tone going on.
Jaden, Jaden, you need to get on the road.
I think that she is amazing.
I mean, she's one of those people
you just have a little pep in your step
after hanging out with her.
She attracts people who want to grow in life.
Yeah.
And she didn't have any naysayers because she doesn't surround herself with naysayers.
That's right.
She's got the right people around her.
You got to do the same thing, America.
Get the right inputs.
Get the right people around you.
Stay focused.
Do whatever it takes.
Whether you're 21 or 61, this plan works every time you work it.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Our scripture of the day comes from Psalms 37, 3 and 4.
Trust in the Lord and do good.
Dwell in the land and enjoy safe pasture.
Take delight in the Lord and he will give you the desires of your heart.
Reba McIntyre said, be different, stand out, and work your butt off. I like that.
Little Reba. Little Reba. It worked out for her. Listen, she never ages. How does that happen? I know. We just saw a photo with Zach in the booth had a photo. He ran into Reba somewhere. She looks
just like she did 20 years ago. I don't know how that happens. Oh, she's a survivor. We know that.
All right. Let's get to the phone lines.
Maxwell joins us all the way
in Australia.
Let's do this thing. What's going on, Maxwell?
Good morning, guys. How are you? Hi,
Jade and hi, George. Hey, thank you so
much for calling. We needed an accent today
and this one's brilliant.
G'day. I've never heard
another Aussie online, so I thought let's be the first.
Yeah, people, we don't get a ton of calls from Australia.
We get a lot of Canadians, but I prefer you.
I want your advice because today is a really good day for crypto,
and I also have a bit of gold.
Okay.
I have about $4,500 in crypto today,
and I have about $4,000 Australian in gold gold which comes out to about 1.4 ounces I am
in a little bit of debt I am paying off my debt I do make about seventy five
thousand dollars a year but I just want to know what should I do with the gold
should I maintain it until 2030 keep it in my bank and then trade it in or what
what do you guys suggest with all my assets?
I do have a bit of a retirement fund, but not much.
Why did you get the gold in the first place?
What was the goal of that?
I inherited it, actually.
Oh, very cool.
Okay, so this is from family?
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
From my pop.
How much debt do you have?
Roughly $2,500, which I am paying off.
I'm working to pay it off very quickly.
Yeah, so that's like a paycheck for you, isn't it?
Well, I wouldn't say that.
I've given myself a deadline, which I'm adhering to.
Like, I've set myself a timeline, so it's like the 30th of April.
It has to all be paid off by.
Okay, so end of April.
What kind of debt is it?
Yeah.
So I've got about $1,100 on a credit card
and have another debt to my employer who bought me a work PC,
and I'm just paying him back out of my paychecks.
But I haven't actually deducted anything yet,
so I still owe them roughly $1,500,
but I'm expecting to pay them back by tax time this year.
So the question is, should you sell the gold, the Bitcoin,
to get out of debt faster?
Well, the Bitcoin I don't want to touch for now, but for the gold, do you guys think I should be selling it to get out of debt, or should I take it to 2030?
No, I don't know why 2030. I would just sell it now. Sell as much as you need to to get out of debt.
And you also don't have an emergency fund, it sounds like.
No, not really, unfortunately.
So I'd sell all the gold to be honest maxwell even if you didn't have the debt the advice would be the same
yeah yeah well yeah i mean because i know dave's not a big fan of the gold well it just it doesn't
really make sense in any plan except for some sort of apocalyptic paranoia where gold becomes
a bartering system. And,
you know, we've heard it's a hedge against inflation. And when times get scary in the
economy, gold will go up in value. But again, in scary times, no one's going out to
buy gold to live their life. They got to turn that into money.
So true.
So I don't know. I'm just, it's not that I'm anti-gold. It's fine if you want to own some
for fun, but I wouldn't use it as part of my investing plan. You're better off investing
in the stock market. Is there an equivalent with your job? Here we have the 401k. Do you
have an equivalent of that in Australia that's kind of associated with your employer that goes
into your retirement? No, but since listening to the show, I've Googled it. And, you know, as an Australian, I can invest in that.
But I've heard Dave been talking about mutual funds.
So potentially, if I do sell the gold pay off the debt, I can just chip into a mutual fund because the return rate looks better than the stocks that I'm looking at.
I'm looking at like Apple.
Exactly. What you're doing with a mutual fund is you're just buying a basket of stocks, which will help you diversify and avoid being too risky having one stock.
If that company goes down or up in value, all of that's too volatile.
So if I were you, I'm selling all the gold, I'm getting rid of all the debt, and I'm going to stockpile an emergency fund with all my future paychecks.
If you're gung-ho on keeping the crypto, I can't talk you off that ledge, then you can hang on to it.
But build that emergency fund as fast as possible, three to six months of your expenses. So do you know how much money it
would be to run your household for one month? I pay so much rent where I live. I pay like
a thousand dollars every two weeks just on my rent. So I need to kind of figure out a game plan
because I'm not in a stable, like if I was to lose my job today, my emergency fund,
like I'd probably be a bit screwed. Are you single? I need kind of a bit of, um, yes, thank God.
Okay. I mean, you, you could look into getting a roommate to help offset these costs right now.
If rent is crazy over there. It's a studio. I live like 600 meters from the Harvard bridge. So
the studio is like super expensive, but you know, I'm definitely touching base with what I need to do to stay afloat.
I'm looking at maybe a different job, different, like maybe starting a business.
Is it necessary for you to live in such a high rent area for your job?
If you move further away, could you find rent that's, you know, $1,200?
The thing is, Sydney is crazy. It's crazy crazy and i really do love the freedom of having my
own apartment unfortunately it is so expensive but i'm looking at jobs that might take me back
out to the northern territory where you don't have to pay rent you just earn like a hundred and
a hundred plus k a year and all you know you're pretty much just taken care of and you have to
just work work work but you still make absolute bank.
Interesting.
So I'm looking at probably doing that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Mining industry.
In many ways, I think that there's a lot of differences between where you live versus where we live, obviously.
But the baby steps, I think, remain the same for you.
And the idea of keeping $1,000 set aside by the time you get this debt paid off and then like george said working to save up that three to six months of expenses in your case i'd probably veer towards
six months because you're the only one bringing in income and then after that if you can find a
way to invest 15 of your income into mutual funds like what you talked about growth growth and
income aggressive growth and international is what we say here and that's that's what i would do and
i think for you the same, if someone from the States called
in and said, hey, you know, I'm paying $2,000 in rent and it's too expensive, we would tell them,
look someplace less expensive, consider a roommate, find other ways to bring in more income.
So in many ways, you know, the equation is exactly the same, even though some of their
particulars may be a little different. Yeah, Even keeping your household expenses to, you know, 25% of your take-home pay going towards the rent,
that's going to help you not get too, you know, sideways where you go, oh my gosh,
no wonder I can't save for the future and do all these things. 50% of my take-home pay is going to
rent. And so that's where I go. I know you want the beauty of having a place to yourself. You
want the beauty of living close to the city. You want the beauty of living close to the city.
You want the beauty of this and that.
But at some point, we have to make some sacrifices in a different direction if we want, you know, we can't have it all.
You can't have the cake and eat it, too.
And so I think you've got to sit down and decide what's really important to you.
And luckily, you don't have much debt, and this thing's going to be gone within a month or two.
But it's the next, you know, five years we have to look at to go, is this sustainable? That's why I've come on board with the baby steps because it's so easy to,
to kind of be mean to yourself and push yourself. But if you just slow down, like, like you said,
Jay, I do want to get this debt and then I do want to, um, put that thousand dollars away.
And then I do want to have that six months back up because that stability having i've now since gaining crypto i've gained so much financial understanding but also since
watching the ramsey show like you guys have helped a lot so thank you i kind of feel like
okay stop being mean and just slow down get the job done you know what i mean that's right that's
right a lot of people just need to stop They got to stop doing 17 things at once
and just focus on one thing at a time,
get their ducks in a row,
build a foundation.
So even with you,
I'm not mad if you want to put more money into crypto,
but I would wait until you've already put 15%
into your retirement plan.
Then with any fun money beyond that,
go ahead and put it in crypto
and I hope it works out for you.
So I think you're on a good path.
And regardless of where you are in the world,
I love that these steps are so simple.
Yeah.
They just work.
It's get out of debt, stay out of debt.
Have a fund for the emergencies for the future
and save for retirement.
And usually I might get a little bent out of shape
for somebody that has gold and crypto,
but with that accent.
I know, he's so charming.
You can't get mad at him.
He's too dang charming.
He got me.
Oh, that was fun.
Oh, I love that these baby steps work everywhere.
That's great.
It's amazing how it works.
This has been The Ramsey Show.
I'm George Camel.
That's Jade Warshaw.
Thank you to all the folks in the booth that kept the show afloat, despite ourselves and
you, America.
Thank you for listening.
Until next time, spend wisely, save intentionally, and give generously. Hey folks, Dave here.
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